Raccoon’s Trash Can

Attachment is the root of all suffering

“You only lose what you cling to.” - Buddha


Think of the last time you were disappointed or angry at something.

Let’s say you were mad that your bus, which was supposed to arrive at 7:00, came 15 minutes late. If you were mad about it, think why. Your suffering isn’t caused by the bus itself, but it’s caused by your attachment to the idea that it should come on time. You’ve built an expectation based on its schedule. “The bus must come at 7:00”. When the reality doesn’t match your expectation, you get angry and therefore suffer.

What hurts you isn't the delay but you being attached to the idea that the bus will come on time. That doesn’t mean you should be a robot who feels nothing. It means that you shouldn’t be angry at something you had no way of changing the outcome of.

You’re attached to control, to predictability. When that attachment is loosened - when you accept - “Okay, it came in late, but I didn’t have any way to predict that it would, or to be in control of it” the suffering alleviates.

Nothing is everlasting

Everything is impermanent. Our bodies will eventually decay, and even our closest relationships will inevitably change due to the passage of time, growing apart, or death. Our emotions will pass. So when we cling to something impermanent and it passes or changes, we suffer.

We will forever be unsatisfied.

You’ve bought a new shiny thing, and your brain gave you some dopamine? Well, not for long because soon you’ll find a new one to chase. The sense that something is always missing, or that we don’t have enough of something, will forever accompany you. Desire is a trap which never ends, only shifts. What once felt exciting becomes ordinary, and the pursuit of happiness begins again. It’s not that wanting is wrong. It’s that we mistake the temporary high for lasting happiness. Peace doesn’t come from getting more, but from needing less.

Acceptance vs apathy

You can still care deeply, but don’t cling to a specific outcome. Expect the unexpected, and see things as they are, not how you wish they were. Caring isn’t the problem, but clinging is. You can care about arriving on time, about people, about goals. But when you tie your peace to how things should go, you hand your calm over to chance. Acceptance means caring without control.


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